Since another round of “Vision was manipulating Wanda” posts are popping up, I thought I’d discuss something that I’ve been meaning to: what Vision thought happened at the compound during Wanda’s escape.

A big part of it comes down to this little bit, right here:

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Why does Tony think Wanda didn’t want to leave? We know that Tony didn’t speak to Wanda before he next sees her in the airport. Vision did. Later on Tony tells Wanda he thinks she hurt Vision’s feelings, meaning Vision has spoken to Tony, and informed him on his view of the event: Tony isn’t making assumptions, Vision told him that Wanda didn’t want to leave.

But why would he, when she had announced to him she was going to leave?

From his perspective, Wanda initially rejects Clint, and agrees with Vision and Tony that she should stay at the compound.

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Vision is inexperienced when it comes to picking up social cues. The creators have made sure we understood that in all of one minute, when earlier in the movie Vision phases into Wanda’s room, misunderstanding the intricacies of human social concepts like privacy.

So while the viewer, and Clint, can easily detect Wanda is dejected and clearly unhappy with her decision, to Vision, Wanda has made the logical choice, and chosen to stay at the compound. 

But then Clint tells her something that makes her change her mind. 

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Clint told Wanda that if she wanted to make up for what she’s done wrong, she has to come with him.

This goes back to Vision missing emotional nuance. The audience knows is that Clint gives the encouragement Wanda needs. She wants to be involved, not sitting on the sidelines. That doesn’t suit a woman who has made sure she was always personally in the fray, fighting for her beliefs, even if at times she wasn’t sure if it was the right thing to do. 

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For Wanda, she saw the logic in what Vision was saying, but emotionally she never fully agreed. Vision was not manipulating her by telling her why he thought she should stay; Clint was not manipulating her by telling he why he thought she ought to go. 

But for Vision, who hasn’t fully grown as a person and whose ability to understand people is limited in some ways, what he sees is a situation where Clint arrives in subterfuge, tricks Vision to make sure he’s alone with Wanda, attacks Vision unprovoked, and then uses her guilt against her to get her to side with him. 

So later, when Tony asks what happened, Vision will say that Wanda never wanted to leave. Wanda had agreed with him; Wanda was safe. It was the logical choice. 

Shortly later, Vision will learn precisely the impact of emotions, and how influential they are to decisions thought coolly logical.

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I don’t know if you’ve talked about this before, but it’s been bugging me a lot. So I’ve seen a lot of people saying that it was completely vision’s fault that war machine fell in civil war but I really feel like it wasn’t? Sure he was distracted for a second, but when he aimed he was clearly going to hit Sam’s thruster, but Sam dodged so it hit rhodey instead. I’ve also seen a lot of people say that, had hit Sam, sam would’ve died, but the whole point of going for his thruster was so (1/2)

(2/2) he could safely glide to the ground (“turn him into a glider”). Of course, Sam couldn’t have known this so he instinctively dodged, but vision also couldn’t have known sam was going to dodge, so neither of them are to blame, it was a complete accident, right? I’ve also seen people say that vision purposely targeted rhodey since he hurt wanda with that sonic pulse thing, but he would never do that and the idea that people think he would kind of annoys me.


The writers and directors have talked at length about this, and they’ve all confirmed that Vision was distracted by “feelings” for Wanda, exactly as stated in the film. He wasn’t intentionally trying to hit Rhodes (or kill Sam, for that matter). 

Just from a narrative perspective, the whole point of the “turn him into a glider” line is to let the audience know unambiguously that neither Rhodey nor Vision were intending to endanger Sam. Unless you’re hellbent on vilifying either character, there’s no real point in trying to argue otherwise. 

I think the confusion mostly comes from Tony and Vision seeming to agree that Vision has some sort of fault–but it’s not obvious what that is, given that Sam dodged and it was an accident, which leaves us to guess at what it could be. Some people think it means Vision was acting out of malice, or that Vision missed and hit Rhodes. Like I said, neither are true.

The way I interpreted it is that Vision knows that he wasn’t acting logically.

Why didn’t Vision involve himself more in the airport battle?

Why didn’t Vision chase after the Quinjet?

Why didn’t he respond to Rhodey’s first call for assistance? 

Wanda, of course. He was distracted by her and her well-being, leading him to prioritize her before their mission. But Tony and Vision don’t understand this, so both are taken aback. 

In short, let these pages from Avengers #99 describe what I mean:

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Avengers v.1 #99

Joe Russo: [Clint] knows he’s in trouble here. His intent was to ambush Vision and get out of there as quickly as possible. He’s banking on his emotional connection to Scarlet Witch, through the debt that he owes to her brother, that she would help him if he needed it. I mean, she dismantles Vision in this scene, and I think she’s being gentle with him. (laughs)

Christopher Markus: But I will say, something that’s probably lost on most people is that she’s not forcing him through the floor. She has made him unbelievably heavy.

Captain America: Civil War audio commentary, discussion of the Vision vs. Wanda scene (via scarletwitching)

Watch Love Blossom in Captain America: Civil War Bonus Features

Oh that’s interesting–Vision straight up said Wanda could alter reality.

Ms. Maximoff manipulates molecular polarity, allowing her to alter reality. I… am a little harder to explain.

Since it’s cut, it’s not canon, but that’s one more hint that reality-warping is going to factor into Infinity War.

Watch Love Blossom in Captain America: Civil War Bonus Features

kousagi:

Jᴀᴇɢᴇʀ Pɪʟᴏᴛs ᴏғ ᴛʜᴇ Sᴄᴀʀʟᴇᴛ Wɪᴛᴄʜ
Rɪɢʜᴛ Hᴇᴍɪsᴘʜᴇʀᴇ Pɪʟᴏᴛ: Wᴀɴᴅᴀ Mᴀxɪᴍᴏғғ
Lᴇғᴛ Hᴇᴍɪsᴘʜᴇʀᴇ Pɪʟᴏᴛ : “ᴠɪsɪᴏɴ”


A Pacific Rim AU where Wanda is pretty much Raleigh Becket. ]

Hailing from eastern Europe, the reckless red Jaeger known as the Scarlet Witch came to S.H.I.E.L.D.’s last remaining facility in New York carrying twin pilots Wanda and Pietro Maximoff. For almost three years the twins wreaked havoc on the kaiju threat, aiding where they could around the world, until tragedy claimed Pietro’s life.

Vision, an android lab assistant of scientist Tony Stark, was suggested to Colonel Fury as a stand-in for the Scarlet Witch’s lost pilot. Stark reasoned, the android would have 100% drift compatibility to whoever he piloted with, given that his personality is truly neutral and he is compliant to any co-pilot’s orders. Vision was happy to aid Wanda—it was not his first time stepping into a Jaeger, having drifted numerous times with Stark in the Iron Man up until injury prompted Stark’s retirement to S.H.I.E.L.D.’s science wing.

Initially, Wanda hesitated to take Vision into the Jaeger—Pietro was the only person she had ever drifted with, at nearly 100% compatibility. Physical training outside of the Jaeger brought Wanda to see Vision less as “the android” and more as a sympathetic individual who does more than quietly take orders and the abuse of some of the other, cockier pilots around the base (Simon Williams, for one.) 

Still, Wanda is unsettled by the prospect of letting anyone into her mind through the drift—letting anyone into what she felt was only Pietro’s place.

Training with the neutral, synthetic man proved Stark’s theory that Vision could easily drift with anyone—and while it was pleasant enough to be back in the Scarlet Witch, Wanda found herself somehow bothered by Stark’s reminder to her that Vision was “an android” and compatible with anyone due to his mental neutrality. All that mattered, though, was that they could fight the kaiju together, Stark reminded her.

In their first drift, Wanda got caught up “chasing the rabbit” and nearly lost herself in memories of Pietro’s death and their traumatic Sokovian childhood—Vision’s clear mind pulled her from the downward spiral before she lost complete control of the Scarlet Witch. However, the near-disaster was enough to convince Wanda that without Pietro, there was no Scarlet Witch. She could not risk another mistake, even with the promise of Vision being there to ground her. Thus, she ran.

When the kaiju strike again (in accordance with Dr. Banner’s predictions that they would come in greater numbers with greater frequency,) Wanda is paralyzed by her own refusal to act.

Impatient and unwilling to let humanity’s last bastion go down without a fight, Stark takes Vision with him to fire up the Iron Man once more—only to find that Vision is no longer drift compatible with him. Vision posits that perhaps he’s bonded with Wanda in a way he had not expected, perhaps in a manner that directly affected the clarity of his mind.

“I didn’t think that was possible.” Tony says, to which Vision answers, “Neither did I.”

Stark knows the only option left is to bring Wanda back to the Scarlet Witch.

Wanda had left the S.H.I.E.L.D. facility, having decided she would never pilot again—at least, until the pilot pair of the Widow’s Eye, Natasha Romanoff and Clint Barton seek Wanda out and convince her in so many words, “Wanda, get in the robot. With the other robot.” (Those were Clint’s words.)

The Scarlet Witch rises again, with pilots Wanda and Vision, to fight the kaiju threat. Carrying a nuclear weapon into the kaiju’s gateway, they carry out the final orders to seal the rift between Earth and the kaiju world for good. 

“It’s okay, Wanda. I can do this alone. All I have to do is fall. Anyone can fall.”

[ more notes for this AU under the cut ]

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